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and materials necessary for the custody and maintenance of the prisoners and persons detained within said jail, shall be purchased by said sheriff tinder the supervision of the board of supervisors on the credit of the county of Sullivan, and his actual and necessary disbursements in providing for the same shall be a county charge, and shall be paid by the county as follows: The sheriff shall keep a correct and itemized account of such disbursements in a book or books, provided for that purpose at the expense of said county, each item of such account shall specify the date on which it was incurred, to whom paid, the place where paid and for what, or the purpose for which it was paid. The sheriff shall also obtain a voucher for each item incurred by him so far as practicable, and if any such item exceeds the sum of twenty dollars it shall be duly verified as to its correctness, and the payment thereof, by the affidavit of the person furnishing the same. The expenditures for the food of said prisoners and for preparing the same for use, shall be kept in a separate place in said book or books, and separately stated in his annual report. An itemized account thereof shall be presented to the board of supervisors of said county during the first session of the annual meeting of said board of supervisors for audit, and the amount thereof shall be audited and allowed the same as other county charges. The said account shall be verified by the sheriff the same as other county charges are required by law to be verified. Accompanying said account shall be a verified statement of the sheriff giving the names of all persons confined in said jail during the time covered by said account, and the number of days each. one of said prisoners was confined during said period. It shall be the duty of the sheriff to use convict labor as far as practicable in the care of the courthouse and jail and the yards and walks ad jacent thereto. He shall be furnished a residence, with light and fuel for heating the same, and a barn, free of rent; and shall be privileged to have his barn and garden work done by convict labor, when practicable, but shall not receive other maintenance from the county.

§ 2. This act shall take effect immediately.

Chap. 400.

AN ACT authorizing the common council of the city of Fulton to audit certain claims and to raise money for paying the same. Became a law, May 10, 1906, with the approval of the Governor. Passed, three-fifths being present.

Accepted by the city.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. The common council of the city of Fulton, in the county of Oswego, is hereby authorized and empowered to consider applications for the audit by it of the claims of any person, association or corporation against said city, presented on or beforc September first, nineteen hundred and six, arising from the acts of the board of fire and police commissioners of the city in purporting to incur indebtedness in the year nineteen hundred and five in aid of the maintenance of the fire department of said city beyond the appropriations therefor; and, if satisfied that one or more of such claims is otherwise just and valid, the common council may audit and allow the same, provided the aggregate thereof does not exceed eight hundred dollars.

§ 2. The common council shall, in the time and manner provided for in section forty-six of chapter sixty-three of the laws of nineteen hundred and two, include in the estimate for the next fiscal year after this act takes effect, submitted to said council by the board. of fire and police commissioners in the year nineteen hundred and six in accordance with the section above referred to, a sum equal to the aggregate of the claims so audited, not exceeding eight hundred dollars, and shall then raise said amount by the annual tax levy in the city of Fulton in the year nineteen hundred and six in addition to the amount which shall be raised by said levy by authority of any provision of chapter sixty-three of the laws of nineteen hundred and two and the acts amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto.

§ 3. The common council may anticipate the collection and application of the tax moneys herein authorized to be raised by borrowing a sum equal to the amount of said audits upon certificates of indebtedness issued by its authority in the name of the city, due one year from date, with interest at such legal rate as the council shall determine. In case the amount aforesaid is so borrowed, the estimated interest thereon shall be included in the

amount of the said next annual tax levy in addition to the sum above authorized to be levied. All moneys raised by authority of this act shall be applied to the payment of the claims audited by the authority hereof.

4. This act shall take effect immediately.

Chap. 401.

AN ACT to amend the labor law, relative to bakeries and confec tioneries.

Became a law, May 10, 1906, with the approval of the Governor. Passed, three-fifths being present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. Sections one hundred and eleven, and one hundred and fourteen of chapter four hundred and fifteen of the laws of eighteen hundred and ninety-seven, entitled "An act in relation to labor, constituting chapter thirty-two of the general laws," are hereby amended to read respectively as follows:

§ 111. Drainage and plumbing of buildings and rooms occupied by bakeries. All buildings or rooms occupied as biscuit, bread, macaroni, spaghetti, pie or cake bakeries, shall be drained and plumbed in a manner conducive to the proper and healthful sanitary condition thereof, and shall be constructed with air shafts, windows or ventilating pipes, sufficient to insure adequate and proper ventilation. No cellar or basement, shall be occupied or used, as a bakery, unless the proprietor shall comply with the provisions of this article, except that any cellar or basement less than eight feet in height which was used for a bakery on the second day of May, eighteen hundred and ninety-five, need not be altered to conform to the provision with respect to height of rooms. Basements or cellars used as confectionery and ice cream manufacturing shops, shall be not less than seven feet in height.

114. Inspection of bakeries and confectioneries.-Bakeries and confectionery establishments are factories within the meaning of this act and are subject to the provisions of article six thereof. They shall be kept at all times in a clean and sanitary condition. If on inspection the commissioner of labor find any bakery or confectionery to be so unclean, ill drained, or ill ventilated as to be unsanitary, he may after not less than forty-eight hours' notice

in writing to be served by affixing the notice on the inside of the main entrance door of said bakery, order the person found in charge thereof immediately to cease operating it until it be properly cleaned, drained, or ventilated. If such bakery or confectionery be thereupon continued in operation or be thereafter operate: before it be properly cleaned, drained, or ventilat、 1, the commissioner of labor may, after first making and filin in the public records of his office a written order stating the reasons therefor, at once and without further notice fasten up and seal the oven or other cooking apparatus of said bakery or confectionery, and affix to all materials, receptacles, tools and instruments found therein, labels or conspicuous signs bearing the word unclean. No one but the commissioner of labor shall remove any such seal, label, or sign, and he may refuse to remove it until such bakery or confectionery be properly cleaned, drained, or ventilated.

§ 2. This act shall take effect October first, nineteen hundred and six.

Chap. 402.

AN ACT to amend the forest, fish and game law, in relation to placing carp in Nassau lake, Rensselaer county.

Became a law, May 10, 1906, with the approval of the Governor. Passed, three-fifths being present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. Section sixty-seven of chapter twenty of the laws of nineteen hundred, entitled "An act for the protection of the forests, fish and game of the state, constituting chapter thirty-one of the general laws," as added by chapter five hundred and eighty-three of the laws of nineteen hundred and four, and amended by chapter three hundred and twelve of the laws of nineteen hundred and five, is hereby amended to read as follows:

8 67. Carp not to be placed in certain waters.-No person shall put or place in the waters of Conesus lake, Keuka lake and Hemlock lake, in the counties of Livingston, Yates and Steuben, in Nassau lake in Rensselaer county, or in any waters inhabited by trout, any fish commonly known as carp, nor shall any person put or place in such waters the spawn of such fish, or use such fish as bait in the waters thereof.

82. This act shall take effect immediately.

Chap. 403.

AN ACT to authorize the village of Sea Cliff to lease certain landowned by said village.

Became a law, May 10, 1906, with the approval of the Governor. Passed, three-fifths being present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. The board of trustees of the village of Sea Cliff is hereby authorized to submit to the qualified electors of said village, at an annual election, or at a special election to be called and held as provided by the village law, the question as to whether or not said village shall lease the whole or any part of the lands owned by said village, lying along the shores of Hempstead harbor, known as the shore front, to any individual, copartnership or corporation, for a term of ten years and if authorized so to do by a majority vote of the legal electors of said village may execute a lease of such lands. The moneys derived from such lease shall be paid into the general fund of said village.

82. This act shall take effect immediately.

Chap, 404.

AN ACT to amend the village law, in relation to the qualification of voters.

Became a law, May 10, 1906, with the approval of the Governor. Passed, three-fifths being present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. Section twelve of chapter four hundred and fourteen of the laws of eighteen hundred and ninety-seven, entitled "An act in relation to villages, constituting chapter twenty-one of the general laws," is hereby amended to read as follows:

§ 12. Qualifications of electors. Each elector qualified to vote at a town meeting, who has been a resident of such territory for at least thirty days next preceding such election, and who is the owner of property within such territory which was assessed upon the last assessment-roll of the town, may vote at such elec

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